Anton LaVey (born April 11, 1930, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died October 29, 1997, San Francisco, California) was an American author and counterculture figure who founded the Church of Satan.
Many details of LaVey’s early life are disputed or unknown. Soon after he was born, his family moved to the San Francisco Bay area. According to some accounts, he left high school to join a circus. He subsequently worked as a psychic and as a nightclub organist, among other occupations. Meanwhile, he developed an interest in the occult and gained local celebrity in San Francisco as a dark, mysterious figure who rejected traditional Christian morality. Having changed his name to Anton Szandor LaVey, in 1966 he founded the Church of Satan, calling himself its high priest, on Walpurgis Night (April 30), a traditional night of revelry in northern Europe and Scandinavia. Three years later he published The Satanic Bible, in which he set down the teachings and rituals of his church.
LaVey presented Satanism not as the practice of evil or as the worship of an actual Antichrist but as a kind of ethical egoism. According to LaVey, traditional religions were fundamentally hypocritical and dangerously inhibited the physical tendencies and emotional needs that were vital to human life. He claimed that his brand of Satanism was inspired by his having noticed as a teenager that the men he saw at church on Sunday, praying to God for absolution, were the same ones he had seen at burlesque shows on Saturday night. LaVey’s Satanism was in fact atheistic: the opposition between God and Satan represented for him the struggle between hypocrisy and repression on the one hand and indulgence and liberation on the other. LaVey was also not a nihilist: he instructed his followers to obey the law, and he taught that indulgence in pleasure could be beneficial only if it did not harm others.
LaVey’s persona was always greater than the Church of Satan, whose membership never exceeded about 2,000 people and which declined when a splinter group, the Temple of Set, formed in 1975 in response to LaVey’s selling of higher church offices. His fame was enhanced through his popular writings, the best known of which was The Satanic Bible. However, many of the claims he made about his past—including that he had had romantic affairs with the actresses Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield—were demonstrated by biographers and even by the Church of Satan to have been fabrications.